Here it is:

There are many orchids that are nondescript and dumpy, but they do not rise to the level of luscious hideousness that this does. It would make a great corsage for a witch.
I only spent about an hour and took about 200 snaps. There were lots of photographers with REALLY long lenses, though I wasn't one of them. Although the telephoto might have been very interesting to work with, I didn't bring it. I found the crowds somewhat unnerving, and felt like I was always in other people's way, so the photos were all pretty hasty, hit and run things. The color temperature of the ambient light was all over the map, from north-facing windows to dimmed incandescent, and that made for a challenge too. I really gotta start shooting raw format.
I do like the relatively modest and overlooked species. Orchids that look like an explosion in a drag queen's dressing room don't really do it for me. Here's some that both caught my eye and came out with good clarity and color. Sorry, I didn't note any species names.




















There are many orchids that are nondescript and dumpy, but they do not rise to the level of luscious hideousness that this does. It would make a great corsage for a witch.
I only spent about an hour and took about 200 snaps. There were lots of photographers with REALLY long lenses, though I wasn't one of them. Although the telephoto might have been very interesting to work with, I didn't bring it. I found the crowds somewhat unnerving, and felt like I was always in other people's way, so the photos were all pretty hasty, hit and run things. The color temperature of the ambient light was all over the map, from north-facing windows to dimmed incandescent, and that made for a challenge too. I really gotta start shooting raw format.
I do like the relatively modest and overlooked species. Orchids that look like an explosion in a drag queen's dressing room don't really do it for me. Here's some that both caught my eye and came out with good clarity and color. Sorry, I didn't note any species names.
eye of the beholder?
Date: 2009-03-10 07:33 pm (UTC)Actually, the first one looks a lot like your beard and stray hairs escaping out of your rebel cap in the user pic you chose.
My favorite is the third from the end.
Does the show/signage distinguish between which varieties are "pure" from nature, and which ones have been bred?
Thanks for sharing these!
Re: eye of the beholder?
Date: 2009-03-10 08:27 pm (UTC)Generally species orchids have latinate names while hybrids have english names. There are a few exceptions, most curiously for hybrids that were originally believed to be species. There's a hybrid registry that in theory traces back every hybrid to its ancestor species, and recreations of the same hybrid share the same name (although they can end up looking wildly different).
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Date: 2009-03-10 07:44 pm (UTC)Though, when I think about it, most orchid's look like they're from outer space.
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Date: 2009-03-10 08:14 pm (UTC)Yay for insect pollination!
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Date: 2009-03-10 08:33 pm (UTC)And sorry, but I can’t even hear the words “orchid show” without thinking of Frank Zappa’s “Brown Shoes Don’t Make It.”
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Date: 2009-03-10 08:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-12 03:49 am (UTC)thanks for sharin'